Echocardiography is a valuable tool for assessing acute aortic syndromes, a condition where mortality from type A dissection increases by 1-2% per hour for the first 48 hours.
TTE is a valuable initial tool for assessing acute aortic syndromes, while TEE serves as the safest and most rapid gold standard investigation for high-risk or hemodynamically unstable patients.
Acute aortic syndrome (AAS) is a collective term for several life-threatening acute aortic conditions: aortic dissection, intramural haematoma (IMH), penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer, and traumatic transection. Mortality from acute ascending aortic (type A) dissection increases rapidly immediately after presentation, reaching 1-2% per hour for the first 48 h. Early surgical intervention is recommended for type A aortic dissection and has been shown to improve outcome. Transthoracic echocardiography is an extremely valuable, often overlooked, clinical tool in diagnosing and assessing AAS in the emergency setting. Although diagnostic sensitivity is suboptimal, it is very useful in assessing potential high risk features or complications, such as pericardial effusion, and diagnosing potential differential conditions. A negative transthoracic echocardiography (TTE), however, does not exclude AAS. In patients with a high risk of type A dissection or IMH (identified clinically or by TTE), the safest and most rapid 'gold standard' investigation is transoesophageal echocardiography, ideally performed with the cardiac surgical team standing by. This is of particular importance in the haemodynamically unstable patient. Transoesophageal echocardiography, helical CT, and MRI have similar diagnostic accuracy and, when there is diagnostic uncertainty or no indication for immediate intervention, should be used according to clinical need, local availability, and expertise.
Meredith et al. (Thu,) conducted a review in Acute aortic syndromes. Echocardiography was evaluated. Echocardiography is a valuable tool for assessing acute aortic syndromes, a condition where mortality from type A dissection increases by 1-2% per hour for the first 48 hours.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: